Mannerism
Mannerism was a style of art which dominated European painting from about 1520 to 1600. It originated in the city of Florence as a reaction against Renaissance art. It became dominant all over Europe except England where it was never popular or widely practiced until after 1600 when it evolved into Baroque style. Mannerists tended to use complex compositions and distorted figures in order to express a feeling or mood. It developed as an attempt by artists to return art from the naturalistic depiction of Renaissance art, which had come before it, into an expressionist art form that was more emotional and nuanced. Mannerism began during a time when religion was taking a back seat to the humanist virtues of classical antiquity. People were beginning to think about art in a different way. It was not only mere decoration, but it represented ideas and emotions as well. Mannerism reflected this change in thinking by employing religious themes for inspiration but not always depicting them realistically. Mannerist paintings generally used complex compositions and distorted figures. Some pieces depict an entire scene using only one point of view instead of the normal Renaissance perspective. These compositions often included elongated limbs and exaggerated facial expressions. Mannerist painters employed these techniques to express ideas related to human emotion such as anxiety, depression, or loneliness. Mannerism was an exceptionally individualistic style of art that did not always conform to the canons established by the Church of Rome. In fact, many artists who produced Mannerist works were called before the church to explain their actions. Artists got around this by admitting that they had included some religious content in their work, even though it was not always depicted realistically. Mannerism was also an anti-establishment style of art because it did not follow the Renaissance ideals. It purposely set out to disturb those ideals, with the intention of replacing them with a new and different way of looking at religious themes through paintings. Mannerism was started by artists such as Michelangelo and Raphael, but they eventually abandoned it in favor of the more naturalistic style of art produced by their student, Caravaggio.
Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1580 - Autumn - fine art print
Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1580 - Winter - fine art print
Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1580 - Spring - fine art print
Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1580 - Summer - fine art print
Giorgio Vasari, 1554 - Judith and Holofernes - fine art print
Alessandro Allori, 1570 - Venus Disarming Cupid - fine art print
Jacopo Tintoretto, 1545 - The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1570 - Boy with a Greyhound - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1570 - Mars and Venus United by Love - fine art print
Jacopo Tintoretto, 1528 - Muse with Lute - fine art print
Sofonisba Anguissola - Portrait of a Lady - fine art print
Tintoretto, 1590 - Tarquin and Lucretia - fine art print
Paolo Veronese - Venus Mourning Adonis - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1580 - Saint Catherine of Alexandria in Prison - fine art print
Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli - The Annunciation - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1580 - Alessandro Vittoria (1524 / 25-1608) - fine art print
Paolo Farinati, 1585 - The Adoration of the Magi - fine art print
Agnolo Bronzino, 1545 - St. John the Baptist - fine art print
Giorgio Vasari, 1548 - The Temptation of Saint Jerome - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1578 - Portrait of a Man - fine art print
Jacopino del Conte - Holy Family - fine art print
Giovanni Antonio Fasolo, 1570 - Portrait of a Lady - fine art print
Tintoretto, 1550 - Portrait of a Man as Saint George - fine art print
Giulio Romano, 1539 - The Birth of Bacchus - fine art print
Jacopo Tintoretto, 1550 - Portrait of a Man - fine art print
Jacopo Bassano - The Adoration of the Shepherds - fine art print
Paolo Veronese, 1556 - Portrait of Daniele Barbaro - fine art print
Orazio Gentileschi, 1622 - Lot and his Daughters - fine art print
Camillo Procaccini, 1561 - Pity - fine art print
Orazio Gentileschi, 1620 - The Lute Player - fine art print
Parmigianino, 1540 - Portrait of a Man with a Book - fine art print
Parmigianino, 1523 - Portrait of Lorenzo Cybo - fine art print
Jacopo Ligozzi - Allegory of Avarice - fine art print
Giulio Romano, 1523 - The Holy Family - fine art print
Moretto da Brescia, 1515 - Christ in the Wilderness - fine art print
Agnolo Bronzino, 1550 - Portrait of a Woman - fine art print
Andrea Schiavone, 1540 - The Marriage of Cupid and Psyche - fine art print
Andrea Andreani, 1585 - Virtue violate Ignorance, and the Error - fine art print
Tintoretto, 1545 - The Conversion of Saint Paul - fine art print
Luca Cambiaso, 1575 - Venus and Cupid - fine art print
Tintoretto, 1555 - Summer - fine art print
Agnolo Bronzino - Isabella Medici (1542-1576) - fine art print
